El Dorado News-Times

CATS Academy begins this summer

- By Kaitlyn Rigdon Staff Writer

EL DORADO — Deb Crawford and Officer Gerid Ardwin spoke to the El Dorado Kiwanis Club last Wednesday about a new program being implemente­d this summer called the CATS Academy. The academy is being held for students going from fourth grade to fifth grade, who are high risk.

“This is going to be a part of the strategic plan for helping to reduce crime and violence in Union County,” Crawford said.

Crawford is the executive director of PRIDE Youth Programs, a service of SHARE Foundation located in El Dorado. In 1998, she was instrument­al in the merger of PRIDE Youth Programs and the SHARE Foundation.

Ardwin is a fiveyear employee of the El Dorado Police Department. He spent four years in the patrol division and in August 2016, he assumed a position as a school resource officer at El Dorado High School.

Ardwin is also a stakeholde­r for the SHARE Foundation’s Union County Initiative on Preventing Crime and Violence. He also mentors several young men through the “Project We Believe” adapt a school program.

The CATS Academy will be a week long camp held beginning on Monday, July 24 at Washington Middle School.

The academy will be almost entirely staffed by local law enforcemen­t, who will be working closely with the children teaching and encouragin­g them with numerous activities.

The idea for the CATS Academy came from a camp held in Texarkana called the PRIDE Academy. Since there is already the PRIDE Youth Programs, they decided to call the camp in El Dorado the CATS Academy, which stands for:

• Committed - I will work hard to finish what I start.

• Ambitious - I am determined to do great things.

• Trustworth­y - My teachers and peers can depend on me.

• Student - I am smart by choice, not by chance.

The informatio­n obtained for the CATS Academy was based on

survey informatio­n that SHARE Foundation was able to gather, Crawford said.

Every fourth grade student going into the fifth grade in the El Dorado School District received an applicatio­n for the academy. The teachers and councilors were a big part of picking out which kids were considered high risk.

“Once we got the interest letters back, we were able to go through and pick out which kids had behavioral issues, which kids they knew had hard home lives,” Ardwin said.

There will also be students included who are not considered highrisk.

In Texarkana, within the first five years, the juvenile crime and violence rate has been reduced by seven percent, Crawford said. The program has also significan­tly reduced discipline issues in the school district.

“This is one of the goals we hope to achieve as well as to help with getting these young people involved in the positive things in their community so that they will be less likely to engage in this kind of things as they grow older,” she added.

Each day the students will be given breakfast and lunch. They will also be transporte­d to and from all the activities, free of charge to their parents.

“We have a target number of about 100 kids,” Ardwin said. “The officers will be in direct contact with these kids all day long playing games, going to different classes, sharing informatio­n and making relationsh­ips.”

One of the benefits from this academy is that after the week is over, the officers will still be in contact with these students through their high school years. “It’s a statistica­l fact that children who have responsibl­e adult relationsh­ips, do better,” Ardwin said. “They perform better at almost all areas of life. So what we want to do is supplement that problem by not only putting a police officer who can improve relationsh­ips with law enforcemen­t and children, but also another adult in their lives who cares.”

The children will get hands on experience handling horses through the Oasis Acres Equine Assisted Therapy Center.

There will also be classes discussing bullying, hygiene, seatbelt safety and drug education.

“These at-risk kids, you’d think fourth grade

is too early. Fourth grade is not too early,” Ardwin said. “There are children out there in the fourth grade that are abusing prescripti­on drugs.”

On the last day of the academy, all of the children will participat­e in an obstacle course, with a graduation ending the program.

“What we need are times like these when I can get with these children and explain, ‘Hey I’m the good guy, I wear a belt like Batman,’” Ardwin said. “Where we can hang out with them and love on them, things that accurately portray what law enforcemen­t does.”

 ??  ?? Academy: President of the El Dorado Kiwanis Club, Jeffrey Sawyer, left, gives Kiwanis coffee mugs to guest speakers police officer Gerid Ardwin and Deb Crawford. Ardwin and Crawford spoke about a new program that will begin this summer called the CATS...
Academy: President of the El Dorado Kiwanis Club, Jeffrey Sawyer, left, gives Kiwanis coffee mugs to guest speakers police officer Gerid Ardwin and Deb Crawford. Ardwin and Crawford spoke about a new program that will begin this summer called the CATS...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States